The Scotsman

Rosberg capitalise­s on Hamilton’s poor start

● German closes gap to two points with win in Italy

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Lewis Hamilton refused to accept blame for the dreadful start in yesterday’s Italian Grand Prix which scuppered his hopes of a 50th career victoryand­blewthewor­ldchampion­ship wide open.

Nico Rosberg moved to just two points behind Hamilton after he took advantage of his title rival’s slow getaway to claim his second vic- tory in eight days. Pole-sitter Hamilton, 31, was bidding to become the first driver since the great Juan Manuel Fangio in the 1950s to claim a hat-trick of consecutiv­e victories at the so-called Temple of Speed.

But a poor opening to the race, after similar starts cost the world champion probable victories at the opening two rounds in Australia and Bahrain, was to prove damaging.

Gobbled up by Rosberg, both Ferrari drivers, and then the Williams of Valtteri Bottas and Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo, it lefthamilt­onfacingan­almost impossible task of winning.

Hamilton, who recovered to finish second, informed his team that he was at fault for his slow start, but following the race he insisted it was not his error.

“I knew my engineers would be worried and nervous of how the start went, so that’s why I tried to put their minds at ease,” Hamilton said. “I don’t really know what happened. I did everything as normal.”

While Hamilton’s team publicly insisted his sluggish getaway was a combinatio­n of car and driver, the Briton appeared more at fault. “In the race he said, ‘Don’t worry guys, I got it wrong at the start’,”

Hamilton passed Ricciardo with a sleek move on lap two, but he struggled to make his way past Bottas. Indeed by the time Hamilton eventually took the Finn on lap 11 he was already 11 seconds behind his

0 Nico Rosberg, centre, celebrates his win at Monza next to Lewis Hamilton, left, and Sebastian Vettel. Mercedes team-mate. And by the time he had leapfrogge­d Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen, courtesy of stopping for tyres on one less occasion than the Ferrari pair, the gap stood at 15 seconds.

A strong performanc­e by Rosberg enabled him to claim his seventh win of the season and suddenly the momentum is falling back in his favour.

“An F1 race is never straightfo­rward,” said the German. “The start is always a big battle and I managed to win that. I needed to keep the pace up and it is never easy, but it was not the toughest race.” Vettel completed the podium, while Jenson Button – in what could be the start of his farewell tour after he announced he will not be racing next year – finished 12th. Jolyon Palmer retired after a collision with Sauber’s Felipe Nasr.

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